Dobrov, 'Prosody of Greek Speech', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9507
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9507-dobrov-prosody
@@@@95.7.5, Devine/Stephens, Prosody of Greek Speech
A. M. Devine and Laurence D. Stephens, The Prosody of Greek
Speech. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994. Pp. xxii
+ 565. ISBN 0-19-508546-9.
Reviewed by Gregory Dobrov -- The University of Michigan
dobrov@umich.edu
The intersection of classical philology and contemporary
linguistics implicit in The Prosody of Greek Speech (hence
PGS) is so narrow that the scholars who might be expected to read
the book cover-to-cover with interest and understanding may well be the
very same group called upon to review it for professional journals. This
restriction to a specialist readership has as much to do with
presentation as with the difficulty of bridging demanding disciplines. As
I read this impressive record of the long and productive collaboration
between A. M. Devine and Laurence D. Stephens, I recalled being asked
over the years by quite a few mystified readers of CP and
TAPA if I understood the DS papers and, if so, what they were
about. Separately, it is true, the installments have been hard to
contextualize, much less enjoy. Within the expansive framework of
PGS, however, their project becomes more coherent, accessible and
interesting.
DS state their purpose clearly in the first sentence of the
preface: "the aim of this book is to answer the question what did
Greek prosody sound like?" My most general disappointment with
PGS, then, is its reluctance to answer this question in a way that
would be intelligible to a competent philologist of Greek with some
linguistics, in the manner of, say, W. S. Allen's Vox Graeca and
Vox Latina. I single out Allen as a linguist whose talent for
elegance and communication has made his little books useful and famous;
he is also, of course, the author of the well-written Accent and
Rhythm (1973), an important piece of comprehensive scholarship in the
field of theoretical Greek prosody. I fear that PGS may not
receive the attention it merits as the authors have chosen to embed their
original research in an unnecessarily digressive and derivative matrix
advertised by a bibliography of nearly two thousand items and a layout
peppered with "borrowed" illustrations of everything from stroboscopic
views of vocal cords to prosodic enclisis in Kwakwala.
The reconstruction of Greek prosody in PGS follows a
hierarchy of domains: syllable, word, appositive group, minor phrase,
major phrase, utterance. The ten chapters of the book are, accordingly,
devoted to: the physiology of prosody (1), the syllable (2), rhythm (3),
pitch (4), word prosody (5), connected speech (6), the appositive group
(7), the minor phrase (8), the major phrase and utterance (9), and topic
and focus (10). In the first chapter DS dally explaining the basics of
speech production (i.e., "labial" vs. "dental") at a level of
sophistication oddly incongruous with that required to appreciate the
next nine chapters. At the other extreme is their refusal to translate
crucial but admittedly "less than transparent" testimonia from the likes
of Dionysius of Halicarnassus and Choeroboscus on Hephaestion. From a
historical and applied linguistics point of view the omission of any
diachronic or dialectal perspective from the prolegomena is astonishing.
Surely the undifferentiated use of texts from Homer to Babrius as
evidence for a homogeneous "spoken Greek" is a dubious foundation that
needs more than mere mention (as on pp. 451-52), it needs a defense! This
question of "what exactly is PGS about?" is bound up with
another: "to whom exactly is PGS addressed?" The authors'
lack of interest in appealing to a more general Classics readership is
evident throughout: having implied that they wish to engage the serious
Hellenist, they wander all over the intellectual map conversing in turn
with various members of an implicit audience consisting mostly of
metricians and phonologists. But which phonologists, exactly? In
distinction from modern work in the field such as D. Steriade's "Greek
Prosodies and the Nature of Syllabification" (diss. MIT, 1982), DS
exclude a general linguistics readership by leaving all the Greek
untransliterated and untranslated. As for Classical metricians, they are
a practical lot likely to be frustrated with PGS as offering
little in the way of concrete, applicable results.
Thus W. S. Allen's warning in Accent and Rhythm (p. 16)
that "only by becoming a linguist can the metrist be adequate to his
task" is programmatic for PGS. On page 46, for example, DS explain
that "there remains an enormous amount of variability in the actual
duration of what, at a more abstract level, would be considered the same
phonological unit.I This variability arises from the influence of the
context in which the phonological unit is embedded. Large portions of the
rest of this book are devoted to eliciting the complex of factors that
make up that context." PGS, then, is a loosely concatenated series
of technical studies in prosody along these lines and, as such, does have
much to offer the interested reader. DS have developed a formulaic
approach to each problem they tackle: they break an issue down into
manageable bits which they process first on a general, cross-linguistic
or comparative, level. From this perspective they work their way back to
Greek, responding to relevant research and presenting their own findings.
Consider, for example, DS at work at on a particularly interesting problem.
In their discussion of the syllable DS engage proponents of the
new concrete phoneticism such as M. Rossi and M. L. West who argue that
meter is sensitive to subtle submoraic durational distinctions. The view
of the sequence biceps>longum>anceps>breve as a general functional
hierarchy underlies most research that uses metrical distribution as
evidence for moraic, submoraic, and segmental duration. The promised
"careful empirical investigation" of this problem takes up a full half of
the 63-page chapter and is broken down into discussions of method,
syllable structure, and a host of specific moments: muta cum liquida,
intrinsic vowel duration, contextual vowel duration, intrinsic consonant
duration, contextual consonant duration, rime structure, light syllables,
heavy syllables, superheavy syllables, and prepausal location. The
typical sub-section follows the pattern outlined above, i.e., from
cross-linguistic comparison to a focus on Greek. Thus, in their
discussion of superheavy syllables (pp. 76-79), DS adduce evidence for
phonologically significant hyperbinary difference (e.g.,
light-heavy-superheavy) in languages such as Estonian and Yavapi. They
continue with glances at evidence from research on North German dialects,
Japanese, Arabic, Hindi, Finnish, Sanskrit, Classical Persian, Urdu,
Luganda, Hausa, Bolanci, Alabama, Tewa, Kaliai and Yokuts. Then comes the
inevitable DS table illustrating an analysis of Greek verse: sampling
Homer, tragedy, and the iambographers they test the metrical relevance of
CVC syllables in a specific environment (long third anceps in the central
syllable of the molossus-shaped word). The result is simply that the
distinction heavy/superheavy is not metrically relevant in Greek. Caveat
lector: the task of repeatedly following a complex route to a simple
answer--from paragraph to section to chapter and beyond--requires
chalcenteric determination. I confess that when I had worked my way
through about fifty pages of this particular thicket, I cheated and
looked ahead, weary of the ring-composition pattern seasoned with
innumerable references to exotic research. On page 84 I found the scoop:
Consequently, it is not possible to sustain either the idea that
segmentally based submoraic distinctions in duration are metrically
relevant or the overly restrictive position according to which the metre
gives evidence for no durational distinctions other than the binary
distinction between heavy and light syllable.I What these data suggest is
a theory in which syllable sequences are phonologically processed into
rhythmic structures for speech production.
This is an important, if inelegantly stated, conclusion valuable indeed
to anyone interested in metrical and prosodic theory. Like most moments
of insight in PGS, this summary accords with common sense and is
far from surprising. I wish only that the journey were not so tedious.
The contribution of PGS becomes more sketchy and tentative
as the authors move outward from their field of mastery towards ever
longer constituents. The chapter on the appositive group, for example,
though spanning ninety pages (285-375), sounds in the end like an update
to the discussion of proclisis in H. W. Chandler's Practical
Introduction to Greek Accentuation (Oxford 1881). They
do survey a fascinating assortment of material along the way,
however, including Broca's aphasia, word games, figures of speech, and
inscriptional evidence. "Proclitics are not atonic," they conclude.
"Although they are part of the rising trajectory, they are more
comparable to lexical grave accented words than to preaccentual word
internal syllables I." Again, this is interesting if impossible to
incorporate into the actual pronunciation of Greek. Given DS's
fascination with cross-linguistic comparison, I was surprised to find no
mention of current work on anaphora in their discussion of function words
(pp. 291-92). Syntax is not their strong suit, to be sure, and there are
evidently limits even to a bibliography with global ambitions.
As a native speaker of Russian, I especially enjoyed the last
chapter of PGS, "Topic and Focus," if not for conclusive results
(an unfair expectation) at least for the way in which DS draw attention
to a central aspect of discourse usually glossed over with general talk
of "emphasis." This is an important phenomenon at the interface between
syntax and semantics that often eludes students of ancient languages. One
can only marvel at DS's intrepid and virtuosic attempts to use the
Delphic Hymns, poetic texts, and inscriptional evidence to shake a "dead"
language to life. Reversing E. Sapir's injunction, "study carefully the
phonetic system of a language I and you can tell what kind of verse it
has developed" (p. viii), they work wonders hypothesizing the cadences
and sonic contours of spoken ancient Greek. This is an interesting aspect
of their work that defies simple description so I invite you to visit
their gallery of diagrams (Chapter 9) where every picture tells a story.
If my yearning for more coherence and concreteness was left
unfulfilled, I nevertheless appreciate how much greater a challenge DS
have had to face in studying Greek than do those who work on modern
languages. In the end, however, I am still haunted by the image of the
diligent Hellenist who remembers W. B. Stanford's enthusiastic 1967
Sather Lectures on "The Sound of Greek" or who may have been intrigued by
K. J. Dover's J. H. Grey Lectures on "Greek Word Order" (both ignored by
DS) and who seeks an enhanced understanding of the language s/he teaches
for a living. After reading pp. 376-455 s/he will be no doubt be dazzled
by the long, detailed, and aggressive speculations on pitch accent
catathesis; s/he will wonder how they can be so confident that the
"melodies" of the Hymns have direct bearing on the language used in daily
life (where and when, by the way?); and s/he will probably lay the book
aside somewhat annoyed with linguistics in general and repeat the
question with which it all began: "what did Greek prosody sound like?"